In these tutorial series I assume that you are a complete noob or that you have seen my other tutorials! These should be somewhat easy, but if you have a question just ask!

In this tutorial I'll show you where to download Notepad++ and how to use, header, paragraph, link, and image tags.
Put this in your text editor:

<html>
<body>
</body>
</html>

As you can notice, the tags are all lowercase; right now it don't matter if you do uppercase or lowercase for in my next tutorial I'll introduce you to

<!DOCTYPE>

. All the elements that you want the visitor of your website to see will be in the

<body></body>

tags.
Header tags go from

<h1></h1>

to

<h6></h6>

. You may not think these are important, but when we make a WordPress theme they will be . Here is the code I used in the video:

<h1>Hello Youtube</h1>
<h2>Hello Youtube</h2>
<h3>Hello Youtube</h3>

When you display that in your web browser you should notice that the text is bold and the font is huge; you should also notice how the font size decrease as the header number increases. You can now assume that

<h6></h6>

is the smallest.

<p></p>

defines a paragraph. There is a lot of styling you can do with paragraphs that I will show you when I start the CSS tutorial series. Here is the code I used in the video:

<p>This is an example of a paragraph.</p>

There really isn't much to explain about the paragraph right now.
When we begin creating full fledged websites we will be using links to create magnificent navigation bars. Links may be a little tricky to remember because they don't have one letter or one number for the syntax. Here is the code that I used in the video:

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/">YouTube</a>

When you deploy that in your web browser you will notice that the font color is blue, it's underlined blue, and that if you click on it you will be at YouTube. Then if you go back to the file the text and underline will probably be purple. This looks rather ugly, but we shall make it look beautiful when we finish CSS.
Images are very similar to the links. I try to use a photo from Newegg, which I fail to do. lol. Here is the code I used in the video for images:

Great stuff. It's good to know that people will be teaching people about standards and the theory behind it.

By the way. The Vimeo video is private so you can only watch it if your signed in on Vimeo. I don't have an account and I'm pretty sure not everyone else does. Could you upload it on Youtube or maybe make the video public?

Great stuff. It's good to know that people will be teaching people about standards and the theory behind it.

By the way. The Vimeo video is private so you can only watch it if your signed in on Vimeo. I don't have an account and I'm pretty sure not everyone else does. Could you upload it on Youtube or maybe make the video public?

Thanks.

The videos are first uploaded to YouTube. I'm only using the Vimeo so that I can share the videos with the dream.in.code channel.

While using Notepad++...Remember to set it's syntax high-lighting to HTML.
BTW, you missed out two of the most important markup tags.

The head element is a container for all the head elements. Elements inside <head> can include scripts, instruct the browser where to find style sheets, provide meta information, and more. <head></head>

The <title> tag defines the title of the document. <title></title>

You could also mention CSS style sheets...if you're planning on compiling another tutorial.

I have made tutorials about the head and doctype, I have the video on here and YouTube. The tutorial was disapproved for I haven't been giving it my all. I'm going to redo the text version of my tutorial and make it more informational.

While using Notepad++...Remember to set it's syntax high-lighting to HTML.
BTW, you missed out two of the most important markup tags.

The head element is a container for all the head elements. Elements inside <head> can include scripts, instruct the browser where to find style sheets, provide meta information, and more. <head></head>

The <title> tag defines the title of the document. <title></title>

You could also mention CSS style sheets...if you're planning on compiling another tutorial.

In Notepad++, The language is automatically determined by it's file type, unless you have not saved it then you need to set the syntax to HTML.

While using Notepad++...Remember to set it's syntax high-lighting to HTML.
BTW, you missed out two of the most important markup tags.

The head element is a container for all the head elements. Elements inside <head> can include scripts, instruct the browser where to find style sheets, provide meta information, and more. <head></head>

The <title> tag defines the title of the document. <title></title>

You could also mention CSS style sheets...if you're planning on compiling another tutorial.

In Notepad++, The language is automatically determined by it's file type, unless you have not saved it then you need to set the syntax to HTML.

Also, The head can link in JS Library's too.

That's always nice when you can use the head link in JS's Library. Sort of can clean up the page a bit. depending on what else is on the page.

This is not what I am looking for, but instead I was looking for an "instructional manual" on HOW TO USE Notepad++; not coding part and your post is about coding - not the Notepad++. But, here's link for those who want to squeeze every feature out Notepad++ to make our work in coding much easier. Anyhow - the link is great find. http://tinyurl.com/ap7hlob

This is not what I am looking for, but instead I was looking for an "instructional manual" on HOW TO USE Notepad++; not coding part and your post is about coding - not the Notepad++. But, here's link for those who want to squeeze every feature out Notepad++ to make our work in coding much easier. Anyhow - the link is great find. http://tinyurl.com/ap7hlob